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<TD class=allWide><SPAN class=bigHeadline>Asia faces jobs crisis that
could hit growth </SPAN><BR>><SPAN class=all>By Jo Johnson in New
Delhi<BR>>Published: April 27 2006 22:06 | Last updated: April 28 2006
03:54</SPAN><BR>><IMG height=20 alt="" src="http://news.ft.com/c.gif"
width=1>>
<P class=fp>Asia is heading towards an employment crisis that could lead
to social breakdown and a rapid collapse in growth rates, the Asian
Development Bank has warned.</P>
<P>“The outlines of an Asian employment crisis are already taking shape,”
Ifzal Ali, the ADB’s chief economist, said in New Delhi. “Strong economic
growth alone will not solve the [region’s] problem.”</P>
<P>The slow pace of job creation even in countries with relatively high
growth rates has left 500m unemployed or underemployed in a region with a
total labour force of 1.7bn. Another 245m are set to join the labour
market over the next decade.</P>
<P>Mr Ali warned that unless economic activity became more inclusive,
joblessness in the region would cause social instability, political
strife, policymaking paralysis and capital flight.</P>
<P>“In India, for example, we could step back from 7-8 per cent growth to
3-4 per cent growth very easily within five to six years if unemployment
and underemployment is not addressed,” Mr Ali said at the launch of an ADB
study of Asian labour markets.</P>
<P>While the newly industrialised economies of Hong Kong, South Korea and
Singapore had succeeded in generating many “good jobs”, demanding high
skills and wages, others, especially in south Asia, had failed.</P>
<P>Although the region has made progress in reducing poverty in the past
two decades, almost 1.9bn Asians still survive on less than $2 a day,
either unable to find work or earning too little when they do, the bank
said.</P>
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<TD class=redLinkBd>Battle lines form over jobs plan<BR>><A
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<P>The bank said a “huge global oversupply of labour” resulting from the
growing integration of China, India and Russia with the world economy had
led to a “race to the bottom” as companies pursued competitiveness with
“often ideological zeal”.</P>
<P>“Asia’s success will sooner or later be eclipsed by the pressures of a
huge ‘reserve army’ of unemployed and underemployed workers who are
constantly driven to seek out employment at substandard wages in order to
survive,” Mr Ali warned.</P>
<P>In China, it is getting harder to create jobs. In the 1980s, the ADB
study calculates, it took a 3 per cent growth rate in China to induce a 1
per cent increase in employment, compared to the 8 per cent growth rate
that was required to achieve the same result the following decade.</P>
<P>Employment growth rates have been especially disappointing in the
formal sector, where production is more capital-intensive and workers have
defined employment contracts that provide for decent working conditions
and greater job security.</P>
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